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For decades Killington was famous for being the 1st to open and the last to close in the east. Many years they would open mid-October and close mid-May or even longer. Thats a 7 month season year in and year out. It was a big blunder last year to suddenly close mid-April and lose their status as having the longest seaons. I feel that could be 1 reason they lost their national status.
That only happened a couple years ago, though. Losing national status at this point is a 15-20 year process with all the development programs.For decades Killington was famous for being the 1st to open and the last to close in the east. Many years they would open mid-October and close mid-May or even longer. Thats a 7 month season year in and year out. It was a big blunder last year to suddenly close mid-April and lose their status as having the longest seaons. I feel that could be 1 reason they lost their national status.
The only way any resort is going to make themselves into a clear cut leader in the east is to make a truly dedicated effort to bumps. Even the effort at Mt. Ellen this year I don't see as being enough. You need a long season, a public course or two, and a bunch of natural runs ranging in difficulty. If Killington wanted to, they could do it on Bear again. Short seeded section on the bottom of O.L., keep Wildfire bumped consistently, and seed the flat upper part of Bear Claw. There are other places they could do it, but the terrain at Bear provides for a nice progression of beginner bumps to the good stuff on O.L., and gives those getting into it on Bear Claw some good stoke by watching the top notch guys fly down O.L.C. Improvements at other NE areas.
Killington's size and infrastructure differential / advantage used to be HUGE back in the day. Now, not nearly so much with how much other areas have grown and modernized their facilities to have as good or better lifts, snowmaking, lodges etc.
I think Killington could do a lot better than what it is doing now, but I don't ever see it being considered the consensus number one area in the east like it was from the early 80's through the mid 90's. That's even with a Pico interconnect and base village. The competition has improved too much for that to happen.
The only way any resort is going to make themselves into a clear cut leader in the east is to make a truly dedicated effort to bumps.
The only way any resort is going to make themselves into a clear cut leader in the east is to make a truly dedicated effort to bumps. Even the effort at Mt. Ellen this year I don't see as being enough. You need a long season, a public course or two, and a bunch of natural runs ranging in difficulty. If Killington wanted to, they could do it on Bear again. Short seeded section on the bottom of O.L., keep Wildfire bumped consistently, and seed the flat upper part of Bear Claw. There are other places they could do it, but the terrain at Bear provides for a nice progression of beginner bumps to the good stuff on O.L., and gives those getting into it on Bear Claw some good stoke by watching the top notch guys fly down O.L.
The problem is, the money isn't in it for them. Hopefully bump skiing will come full circle again sometime. With their altitude, decent snowfall, terrain, and location, they're a natural candidate for being a leader on the bump skiing scene. Just need the bump skiing scene to come back.
And bring back the party for BMMC. That's key.
Bumps alone won't do it. The Killington brand has always been all about superlatives. ASC really tarnished the brand and POWDR completely destroyed it. .
It needs to have the biggest and best terrain park. .
It needs to have the best bump skiing.
It needs to have the most acres of tree skiing.
It needs to have the best intermediate terrain.
It needs to have the best family programs.
It absolutely needs to throw the best spring parties in April and May.
I figure it will take at least a decade of chipping away at that 10 years of neglect to restore the resort. New base lodges. Intermediate terrain that can only be added by doing the Pico interconnect. Way more on-the-map tree skiing than they have now. A much better customer experience for families than the disaster today at Snowshed and Rams Head during holiday periods. .
It's #1 on my list of places to hit, I'll be there May 3rd. I'm open to being totally off in my assessment of this. But going off of what I hear, they're certainly the preferred place in the east for bumps, but not the standout #1 for bumps, where ALL the big time bump skiers go.Dude
A. Did you ski Sugarbush this year, or have you skied there ever? Outside of the public course part of your argument, the bumps at Sugarbush this year and really for the past ten have been better than what Killington even offered during their hey dey, during which I got a spring pass many of the years.
From the people 2knees listed, I was taking the question to be, "why isn't Killington the big time place for moguls anymore?" Certainly bumps are about the last thing on the list for getting the overall #1 back at this point.B. You have defined what would be the best for what YOU want. Bumps were not what made Killington the year in and out consensus #1 in the past. It was as Geoff said, the superlatives, which don't get me wrong, bumps were a part of, but not the whole story.
It's #1 on my list of places to hit, I'll be there May 3rd. I'm open to being totally off in my assessment of this. But going off of what I hear, they're certainly the preferred place in the east for bumps, but not the standout #1 for bumps, where ALL the big time bump skiers go.
Totally agree with you. Definitely want to hit the place up next year mid-winter, closing day will just be a sneak preview.cool that you'll hit in on closing day (most likely) but that isnt gonna give you a feel for the way it really is. BMM can extoll on the virtues of Mt. Ellen, but until you've skied castlerock in all its glory, you wont get a total feel for the the sheer amount of bump runs sugarbush has. Also the mall, paradise, ripcord, spillsville, twist, lower birdland, etc.
they just have an intense array of choices not seen at many areas. MRG being one exception.
I understand what you guys are saying but was more talking about the fact that the cream of the crop in bump skiing used to regularly come out of killington but that dried up while the season length, bmmc and such were still pretty much intact.
I guess there is no way you'll see that kind of thing happen the way things are now. although iceman may be the next great one. :razz:
then again, i dont know much about todays competitive mogul scene, certainly dont follow it like it did in the 80's so i could be way off base.